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EILBF..T T1. AliLL, EI)ITOn.i TERM O.-e year, $1.50; six months 7c; three imonth, 50 cents; two months, V 35 cents; one month, 20 cents; single copy, 5 cents, payable in advance. TZR3IS OF ADVERTISING.-$1.00 per square the first insertion, and 50 ets. per square for each subsequent insertion. SW A square is the space of nine lines r,f solid brevier type. S Totices in local olumn 123c. per line for each insertion for one month, longer at inch rates, w:Ih 25 per cent added. t A reasonable reduction made for ad vertisements hy the three, six, or twelveI :nonths. ELBERT H. AULL, WM. P. HOUSEAL, Proprietors. NEWBE RRY, S. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1887. THE RAILROAD ELECTION. "There is a fear that, on account of the obscurity of the terms emr--oyed in the Amendatory Act cl: ring I the Columbia, Newberry and brens Railroad, the township subscription proposed here will not be valid unless a majority of the qualified voters of the township shall vote for it-not a majority of those who vote, but a majority of all, voting and non-voting. Therefore, let every man who has in terest in and hope for Columbia go 1 to the polls next Tuesday and vote "subscription." No registration will be required. Every citizen who has resided in the State and county for the legal period can vote. There is : too much apathy and unthinking ] confidence. Vote !" The above is taken from the Co lumbia correspondence of the News ] and Courier of a recent issue, and may with equal aptness be applied to Newberry. The election on this - subject of subscribing $10,000 from t this township to this road will be held to-day, and every one who feels interested in this road and the town of Newberry should go the polls and yote for "subscription" to-day. The terms of the amended act apply here as well as in Columbia. It is best to take no risks. We feel sure that a _h qualified voter s t ws or of sub- c i g the small amount asked in ere order to secure the road and they 18 should take the trouble to go to the ser polls and vote for subscription. The Yo amount asked Of this township is very me small compound with the benefits to m be derived from the road coming to Newberry. We have now the pros- ' pect of becoming a railroad centre, me and nothing should be left undone Ne in order to secure this for our town. m Because the charter provides thatta this road shall be built by way of Ju Newberry, does not mean that the na; road is obliged to come, whether UI the people of this township give tie anythig towards bringing it here or arc not. It is a very easy matter to of amend the charter. We would be col acting very much in our own light to ma stiybyand le hsroad flank orHc town by a few miles because per- di chance we refused to vote a subscrip- of' tion of $10,000 in order to secure it. prc .....)rtaxes wi'll not be increased more than one-half of one mill in order to give the $10,000 and when the road is built the increased valuation of property arising from the road and shi the property of the road itself in this rot -township will help very materially to Ra pay this back. rot *We are induced to say this much, ( not because we think there is any ner very pronounced opposition, but only isdi to call the attention of those who are sul1 in favor of the road to the impor- ] tance of going out and voting in vOt4 order to have a majority of the quali- city fed voters so that no question should bee be raised as to the validity of the sub- wa: scription. Go to the polls and vote WVa for "subscription." The more rail- Wa roads we can have coming in here the better it will be for our town. ItA will increase our property, give em votE ployment to more of our people, stre bring? population to our town. and elec -help build up manufactories here in laws our midst, and be of advantage to T us in -a thousand ways. to-d It is the opinion of the attorney vote of the road, and he is supported in the this view by eminent counsel in T different portions of the State, that stati +he section referred to would not in- ship validate the election even if there tion should not be a majority of all the and ---qualified voters of the townships. The words "majority of the qualifiedB voters" means the majority of the ss voters who cast a ballot at the elec- lina, tion as distingui.shed from "qualified shar electors," who are entitled to vote, now In other words a voter is one who setts donE votes. But let us have a full vote, be r< The board of directors at their as t meeting in Columbia on Tuesday comi night authoriz"d the President to re- of a ceive bids for building the piers of forg4 Wen Broad River bridge and also the earhs bridge, and the contract will be let of ti soon -also for all the road to Pros- threE perity. If the subscription is voted has 1 for this township to-day, the con-mp tract for grading this road to New berry will be let immediately. , COXSLIDAE1).total CONSLIDAED.to d~ At the meeting of the stockholders four of the Georgia and Carolina Midland now: railroad held in Columbia last week it and the Charleston, Cincinnati and Chicago railroad were consolidated DI -or rather the Three C's has absorbed has the other and made it apart of it. ho ~;On the first page of this paper may come bje found a full report of the pro- has ceedings nd the ails ofagree- .bals. 1ent, by which the Georgia and arolina Midland ceased to be and ecame a part of the great Three C's. ,L1 those interested, except Augusta, ere in favor of consolidation, and ,ugusta says her objection to the rrangement is that the Three C's ives no guarantee as to when or ow soon our road will be built. It eems to us it would have been better > have some guarantee but we hink there is little doubt the road ill now be built and as it stood efore there was little hope. We ave the promise of the road in three ears at the farthest and possibly in ighteen months. The engineers ave started surveying the line from sewberry towards Union in the past ew days and large numbers of bands re at work on other portions of the ine. This company is said to have >lenty of money and will pay the lebts of the Georgia and Carolina tidland. With plenty of money ailroads can be built. Newberry tas bright prospects before her of ecoming one of the largest towns if the up country and an important uilroad centre. Then we can also >ecome a manufacturing centre. Death of Ex-Vice President Wheeler. WATERTOWN, N. Y., June 4.-The Ion. Wm. A. Wheeler died at his iome in Malone at 10 o'clock this norning. He remained in a com Ltose condition during the night and )assed peacefully away without a ign of recognition to those about 11m. Wim. A. Wheeler was born June 0, 1819, in Malone, Franklin Coun y, N. Y.; entered the University of vermont in the class which graduated n 1842, but the sudden death of his ather compelled him to leave his ollegiate course uncompleted. He ommenced the study of law and vas at different times employed as a chool teacher. Soon after his ad nission to the Bar he rose rapidly in he legal profession and was made listrict attorney for Franklin Coun y, holding the position until he de La mes4ain. i one. For~?. se 1 years he was saperinIkndent of v Lools for Franklin Cora'y.- In I 50 and 1851 Mr. Wheeler repre- C Lted Franklin County in the New r rk House of Assembly; was a i mber of the Senate of New York u 1858 and 1859, and president pro C a. of that body. For several t rrs he was much engaged in bank- t and railroad affairs. He was a t mber and the president of the R w York Constitutional Convention 1867-68; was elected a Represen ive in Congress to the 37th, 41st, I and 44th Congresses, and in ae, 1870, was unanimously nomi ;ed for the Vice Pres'de-icy of the ited States by the Republican Na- j ial Convention at Cincinnati. In , political complications which ti se in Louisiana during the session a die 43d Congress Mr. Wheeler was c spicuous, he having been chair- ti n of the special committee of the ia use of Representatives that visited a aisiana, and finally adjusted the b iculi,ies existing there on the basis si what is known as the Weeeler com mise. Railroad Election In Columbia'.c Register, June 8th4.a 'he election in Columbia Town- In >yesterday on the .question of S4 rig a subscription of $40,000 to ti Columbia, Newberry and Laurens ai Iroad brought out but a light el 3, and created no excitement. c< 'ontrary to expectation the oppo- ca ts of the measure apparently put U' but little work, and on the other , no great efforts to affect the re- p were observable. t 'he following is the state of the cr at the following places in the , that at Hampton's not having D a received last night: For. Against. -d 1.........72 - 1 d2.........183 23 B d ........148 14 o d4.........109 49 s >tal.... ....12 73~ di s soon as the small number of wi s cast became known o:1 the H at, the question of whether the 1Y Eion fulfilled the requisites of the m~ as amended was generally dis- H ed, opinions varying wide'y. G he County Commissioners meet at ay at 11 A. M,. to canvass the dtj and their action in regard to matter will be watched with in st. [ae attorney for the railroad Ja ~s that he will claim the town bonds, and considers the elec- g yesterday perfectly satisfactoryco su.fficient. Franklin J.M3oses Pardoned, loI -- ag )STON, June 3--Franklin J. Mo- m< wvho, as Governor of South Caro at one time occupied a large 3 of public attention, but who is. an occupant of the Massachu State Prison, has been par-.la d by Governor Ames, and will Tas leased from confinement as soon Th de customary formalities can be T >lied with. The strange career * [oses finally culminated in the ss ~ry of the name of Thomas ho: tworth Higginson, the author, in the year 1885. In October iat year he was sentenced to years in the State prison. It keen represented that Moses was the :>or health and could not live au ________tee The Fever at Key West. -Tethe Y EST, FLA., June 3.Tesay nutober of cases of yellow fever was Lte is thirteen, of which number stri have resulted fatally. Six are the sick and three convalescent. Th4 Eilled and Eaten by Cannibals. o s MoINES, IowA, June 3.--News been received at Mansion, Cal- the County, that the Rev. Dr. Reid, con left that place last winter to be- divi a missionary in Central Africa, StOC :>een killed and eaten by canni-an din THE EARTHQUAKE VOLCANO. Vegetation in the Valleys Destroyed by Boiling Water. Tusco, ARIzoNA, June .-Explo rers sent out by Governor Torres. of Sonora, to ascertain the existence of o a volcano, as reported near Bahispe, c Sonora, have returned. They report an active volcano fourteen miles r southeast of Bahispe in the Sierra Madre Mountains. The party could not approach nearer than within four miles of the mountains. The crater was pouring forth im- a mense volumes of smoke, fire and lava. Boiling water issued from the a side of the mountain and lava in I vast waves was slowly pouring down r the mountain sides into the canyons, which are being filled up. Boiling water has destroyed all vegetation in the valleys in vicinity. One peculiar r feature of the volcano is its great ac- 1 tivity. Boulders weighing tons were hurled, down from the crater. t - - 1 A Congregation in Church Nearly Sti- s fSed by Escaping Gas. f News and Courier. I CoLUBIA, June 5.-The services 5 in Trinity Church, this morning, were brought to a sudden and un timely conclusion. There are a num ber of gas jets around the several s columns in the church, and about eight feet from the floor. These are properly turned off or on by cocks at the foot of each column, but the last f time the lights were extinguished the t gas was turned off at the meter. This morning, by some accident, the gas was turned on at the meter, and in about ten minutes after the ser vices began the edifice was filled with gas, and the large congregation had to be hastily dismissed. t A New Editor for the "Register." 1 It is understood that in a few days CoL John P. Thomas will become the editor of the Columbia Register. CoL Thomas had long editorial experience as editor of the South Carolinian, I when that paper was published here. Greenville Determined to have the Up per Agricultural Experimental Station. GREENVILLE, June 6.-The county l mass meeting in the interest of se. curing the location of the gricultu 4xpenien~til station in Green ille was held to-day, in the Court- e off, ouse. Col. S. S. Critteuden was ailled to the chair and reports were Eij eceived from various township meet. thi gs held Saturday. Repo:ts were ha niformly of a most encouraging ha haracter, not a vestige of opposition ) the proposed $15,000 appropria- t on being evinced anywhere. At th e close of the meeting resolutions ing ere unanimously adopted clinching th. se already much repeated endorse-~ eni ent of the appropriation for secur- P~ ig the Station. Capt. 0. P. Mills, be! .C. Gower and Col. J. A. Hoyt bu~ ere appointed a committee to take e matter in hand and investigate so r more suitable locations to be Lo )nd in the county. The committee En ill advertise at (once for offers of Ba ~acts of one hundred acres or there- as outs, to be given in during, the ot )minlg week. Leading men are T oroughly satisfied that the county acc ill vote to sustain the $15,000 offer, tin ~id they don't see how any other d entered so far can supersede it in dhE ~curing the location, arc Mr. Corcoran's Illness. pei -x- roc WASHINGTON, Ju~ne 7.-W. W. Cor- tro ran rested quietly last night and to- of 1 .y and the paralysis has not spread to thc y other parts of his system. His mind pal perfectly clear and lhe takes freely the mu urishment allowed by his physicians. the ~veral consultations were held during bui e day by Drs. Lincoln and Hagner, lari d they are much encouraged at the anc onner in which their patient holds his thr mn. They say that but for Mr. Cor- jur ran's extremely advanced age, the se would not be considered serious. A mber of telegrams have been re- Tih ived by the family and many peo- s e have called to express their sym- pla thy. Among the callers were Secre- th y Bayard, Admiral Porter and Ban- T >t, the historian. roal upt ~ath or Prof. Boozer,jofGreenwood. rect ___ tral ews and Courier, the Cou GREENWooD, June i.-Prof. S. P. sell ozer, who was stricken with ap- and lexy last. Tuesday, and who has T ce remained in a comatose state, in d this morning at 3 o'clock He cia s principal of the Greenwood Male sen( gh School and always took a live- iI interest in all enterprises pertain- mei e. to the prosperity of the town. stea s remains were interred in the Tab ~eenwood cemetery this afternoon J (3 o'clock. Dr. J. R. Riley con- uati :ted the burial services, are: ship Lincoln's Attorney General. thrc _____tlen IOUISVILLE, KY. June 4-Gen.ces nes S. Speed, who was attorney try eral under President Lincoln, is pals igerously ill at his home in this A nty. The family and physicians ing te that he can live but a few days Riv4 ger. He is almost 80 years of v , and is gradually sinking from gold e exhaustion. tioni comn Yellow .Tack at Key West. war min [EY WEsT, June 5.-Geo. Crag7in oper d of yellow fever at the hospital e night, making five deaths in all. TI re were two new cases to-day. cr board of health has declared the are t er epidemic and will no longer in- in tt on removing patients to the paid pital.us S~ pital.cons The Unloaded Pistol. ya sum< News and Couier. the]I REENWOOD, June 4.-To-day while pour sons of Mr. R. W. Major, Robert byho George, aged respectively four- lant t and twelve, were playing with that r father's pistol, long unused and doub~ posed to be unloaded, the pistol that accidentally discharged, the ball coffe kng George in the upper end of cofre heart and killing him instantly. Braz sad .event intensifies the grief Yorl ur grief-stricken town. Richmond Terminal. Capi tweeni EW YORK, June 7.-The directors of troub Richmond and WVest Point Terminal New]a pany to-day declare a semi-annual gave blend of 23 per cent. oni preferred trme k, and the directors of the Richmond th si Danville Railroad declared a semi. cover; al dividend of 3 per cent. Both ICoIen indrc pyabnlei July 1 1er NEWS IN BRIEF. Eight men were killed near Altoona, 'a., June 4, by an aceidental explosion f dynamite. Emperor William June 3 laid the >undation-stone of the Holteran Lock f the North Sea Canal, with imposing eremoies. Nearly 40,000 people attended a ieeting of the Anti-Poverty Society 1 New York last Sunday night. Dr. fcGlynn was the principal speaker. Nearly ten thousand immigrants inded in New York one day recently. t was the largest number that ever rrived in a single day. Many Virginia farmers will harvest n average of 15,000 to 20,000 barrels of rish potatoes this season. There is aoney in them as the general crop is hort. News has been received at Mansion, owa, that Rev. Dr. Reid, who left hat place last winter, to become a aissionary in Central Africa, has been :illed and eaten by cannibals. The weather last week was favorable o the growing crops throughout the ?nited States. Needed rains occurred .nd the prospects are very flattering or good crops. The new aqueduct which is to fur ish water for New York city will cost 20,000,000. The tunnelingis being bored Imost entirely through greiss granite .nd will extend from Croton River to 35th street, a distance of thirty-five niles. Its capacity will be 30,000,000 allons of water daily. The Texas and Pacific Railroad ex >ress train was robbed by four masked nen eight miles west of Fort Worth n Saturday night. They took $1,300 rom the express car and three regis ered letters from the mail car. The passengers were not molested. A great national Sabbath-school con ention is in session at Chicago. Stat sties furnished show that there are 9,762 Sabbath-schools, which have ,034,478 pupils and 1,107,170 teachers. )f these 103,315 pupils and 13,054 eachers are credited to South Caro ma. A local cyclone passed through West rn Georgia Thursday night, from outh to north. In Fayette, Coweta, .ampbell, Carol and other counties, nuch damage to crops is reported, and arge numbers of houses were swept way. There was no loss of human ife. There was a great sale June 2 at thens, the first of the East Tennessee nterior towns to feel the effects of the >resent revival throughout the South. Eighty-seven thousand dollars worth f lots were sold at auet'tulin ed" he e io tcoton and woollen to at a cost of $500,000. t is now estimated at the pension w ce that the number of Mexican b ision claims will not exceed 30,000. A ,hteen thousand, of whicb number ee thousand are widows' claims, of 7e already been received, and two al usand two hundred certificates in re been issued. 'ifty-three postoffices will receive h benefit of the free delivery system July 1 by reason of those cities hav attained a population of 10,000, or postoffices having returned a rev ie of $10,000 or over during the F t year. The Southern cities jthus sc iefited are Pensacola, Fla., Colum- T , Ga., Jackson, Meridian and Vicks g, Miss., and Staunton, Va. S' 'wo freight.trains collided four miles lo th of Calera, Ala., Jt ae 4, on the qi .iisville and Nashville Railroad. SL gineer Howard Rowe and Fireman dl ~ton, colored, were killed outright, at was also a negro tramp, while an er tramp was fatally injured. Rowe PI dl with his hards on the throttle. fU 3 trains were badly wrecked. The re ident is attributed to the faulty pa te piece of one of the conductors. C] )uring a circus performance at Nes *n, Germany, on June 4, a storm se and a portion of the roof of the st aus structure was blown ofE The ti Ldant lights hanging from the f were broken, and the blazing pe-i leumn poured down upon the heads d he people below. There were two til usand spectators and a powerful W tic arose. In the midst of the tu- b< It one of the lightly built walls of to structure fell in and the whole Iding immediately collapsed. A o e number of people were burned er i nog~ trampled to death, and Sc ee hundred others more or less in- T ~d' ju he breaking of the Dykes of theA ~iss River in Austria has resulted in merging fifty miles of the Alfold n near Szegedin. It is estimatedI t the damage will reach ?1,000,000- E he legality of assessments on rail Is by railroad commissioners is C< eld by chief Justice Waite in a Jc ~nt decision in the case of the Cen Trust Company of New York vs. County Treasurer of Richland TI nty, S. C., who was enjoined from in ng a locomotive of the Columbia Wt Greenville Railroad Company. qu Lie French and English authorities pin the South Pacific colonies, are ou -ged with liberating convicts and in' ling thenm to the Ufnited States as a uigrants. An agent of our Govern- - Lt says that the French Govern- '] t is offering ?120 per month for a mer to run between Newmea to ite and thence to San Francisco. cluding those caused by the grad- E' on of the first class this year, there [51 vacancies in West Point cadet .There have been appointed Hi ughout the Union 143 young t-en Len, of whom 13 are from N'ew *ee e, as candidates for these vancan- ter and 39 alternates who may have a p tt the examinations if their princi- d fail. d pr< company from Illinois is develop- 0. a gold mine near the Savannah ~r, in Abbeville County, S. C. nteen 5 hafts have been sunk and pri signs are encouraging. Signs of the have been seen on other planta- hal u n that section, and a New York pany is prospecting. Before the the $1,000,000 were taken from Dlorn's anm 3, a few miles south of the present reg ations. It now belongs to the ers :e of Cyrus H. McCormiek. the e increase in price of coffee is be- n ng a serious matter. It is doubleeu y what it was a year ago; and as we gras he largest coffee consuming nation anc *e world, this nmeans that what we has $40,000,000 for last year will cost 0,000,000 this year. Last year we aimed 537,211,000 pounds of coffee ; par consume an equal quantity this it will at present prices cost con- on ~rs $154,000,000. The increase of to er capita consumption from 2.43 ds in 1805 to 9.20 pounds in 1886 agr s how largely the article is usxd dep 1 classes of the people as a stiimu- ten beverage and how important it is the price should be low. The ling of price in the last eight at I Lhs is ascribed partly to a disease pla: has attacked the leaves of the gn tree in Asiatic and East Indian tn a districts, a reported short crop in ta l and speculative schemes in l\ew to ' to take advantage of these facts. timi ptain' s Fortunate Discovery and .Coleman, scbr. Weymouth, plying be- ami Atlantic City and N. Y.. had been. ed with a cough so that he was unable suba ep. and was induced to try Dr. King's j hiscovery for Consumption. It not onlyig him instant relier, but allayed the ex-I no r sorwss in his breast. His children im' v~l affected and a single dose had est. sme happy effect. Dr. King's New Di* begi r is now the standard remedy in the an household and on board the schoo- TI P'ree;..fris1 Bottles of this Standard . IV cu-.ofield a Lyon's b,rug Store. 8-s. Wa] CRIMES AND CASUALTIES. 4 In Old and Feeble Italian Stoned and e: Kicked to Death by Two New ti York Schoolboys. NEw YoRK:. June 7.-Two bovs, John Meehan, aged 9, and Wim. t, Klotzberger, aged 11, were arraigned in the Tombs Police Court to-day 0 charged with murder. They were so small that the magistrate was obliged to rise and look over his desk to see them. While on their way home from school they pelted with stones S and kicked and jostled an old and 0 feeble Italian until he fell, fracturing c his skull. He died in the hospital. t The bovs must stand their trial. t The -coroner refused to hold the t boys on the charge of causing the old t Italian's death and they were dis- a charged by Justice Smith. 0 A LOCOMOTIVE EXPLODES AT A STATION. -CHESTER, P.A., June 7.-The boilor c of a locomotive attached to a south- r bound freight train on the Philadel- y phia and Baltimore Railroad (Balti- t more and Ohio) exploded in front of 1 the passenger station in this city at I 8 o'clock this morning. The air was t filled with flying pieces of iron and r timber and scalding water. A num ber of persons standing on the station platform were badly scalded or cut t with flying missiles. One man, a a carpenter employed on the road, re siding in Baltimore, whose name no one knew, was instantly killed. John Murphy, aged 21 years, telegraph operator of this city, was so badly scalded and injured that his death is momentarily expected. The fireman was standing on the sand-box of the engine and was blown many feet in the air. He was more hurt by the fall than by the explosion. The rail road station was wrecked and a row of buildings on the opposite side of the street badly damaged. Portions of the engine were round three squares away. FIVE BOYS DROWNED WHILE BATHING. 1 MAQUoKETA, IOWA, June 7.-Five boys, three of whom were sons of a John Beck and two sons of Paul t Hindel, ages ranging from 0 to 16 years, were drowned in the Maco- e 7-,1Ve miles east of here, yes- tue rday. Three of them while swim- chi ing plunged off a sand bar into let 'a ater beyond their depth. Another .w >y, plunged in to rescue them, and in ill another boy noticing the failure is the first boy, also plunged in, and m I were drownod. A sixth plunged ag to aid his companions, but failed pa rescue them. None of the bodies tve been recovered. SETTING A BAD EXAMPLE. we HENDERSON, Ky., Juno 7.-Prof. E. Ja Clark, superintendent of public set hools, was shot* to-day by Prof.pr omas Posey, principal of the High rec :hool. The two men having had a alt ag-standing enmity got into a dif iarrel this afternoon in the High the :hool room, when Principal Posey cas 'ew a revolver and fired three times the Clark in the presence of the pu- da, s, wounding him severely in the do' ce, arm gtnd shoulder. Posey sur ndered himself. Both men are COI 'ominent in society. coi USHIED BY A FALLING SCAFFOLD. WAsHINGTON, June 7.-A large we e sf!:theast part of the city. This are orning the masons suspended work ta ring a rain storm and sheltered tha enselves under a scaffold, which i'" L overloaded with stone. The la. eve rers, to make full time, continued an work in the rain and pile stone it C tthe scaffold until it broke down, ushing six men under it. One ma- tj n, named John Clarke, was killed. Ac: ree others were dangerously in- Set red and two less seriously hurt, are TEXAS JUDGE MURDERs HI BRo as CHIcAGo, June 7.-A special from gin ~gie Pass, Texas, says: Thomas ne~ mnb, County Judge of Maverick Co] unty, Texas, killed his brother, lar; seph Lamb, a wealthy ranchman ThE sterday. on Mexican soil. Later gre: omas drove into Piedras Negras, who ~ending to cross to Texas. lie dee s arrested. The brothers had you arrelled over the division of their >perty. Troops had to be called y t to keep the Mexicans from lynch- 0n1. SThomas Lamb. te _______ten' EACHJERS' DEPARTM PNT. los pre ARTHUR KIBLER, EDITOR. A eting or the Teachers' Association he association met in the Prosperity yro h School building, Saturday last at as a en o'clock. About twenty live how~ chers and friends of education were ecz sent. In the absence of the presi- ing it, and at the request of the vice- the sident, Miss Alice Crosson, Prof. E. fron Counts took the chanir.tie tlU the lecturers were present and phy pared to dischar ge the duties assigned the m. This is sonrething that does not Out pen often, andl certainly indicatesSh t the association is finding' favor andl ng the teachers. It is a source of I ret, however, that many of the teach- ecze especially those of the upper part of tn county cannot attend, or do not feel ugh interested to attend. The pro- .Ti m, as will be scen, was a good one, mai every teacher in the county would At'a e gained som ething if present. rs. Long read a very interesting er on Penmanship. :iss Monts read an excellent paper rimary Reading. She laid stress oni ougness in the work, to which we se. If there is ann thing in primary artment which detL ands special at ion, it is reading. '. Geo. Mills gave us The Teacher 'laytimne. Mr. M1. thought it best to with the children and uimpire their es. It is difficult to say just how the her should act, it is not always best become one of the children" at phiy of. Dreher lectured on Proportion Percentage. iIe gave several ex les on the board which made thej ect very plain. The lan. ' of w~ork percentatge by cancellati-m iniV< ives ew principles and is by far the short However, it is not alwa~ys best for___ aners. -shou e last lecturer w.as Ma.u G. G. De- sent -, who spoke of "The Schools of the 9. ucients as compared with those of the oderns." This address was very inter ;ting, as he drew out some of the dis nguished features of each per'od. Each of the above subjects was dis issed with much interest, each speaker iving his views as experience had mught him. We are fully persuaded that this was ae of our best meetings. J. M. H. Impatience in Recitation. Let us step into your school-room. class in Arithmetic is 'reciting. You iddenly turn upon one of the members I the class; and, with a quickness pe aliar to yourself, abruptly ask a ques on. You wait just long enough for ie pupil to discover to whom the ques on is directed; and, before he has time y arrange his answer in his mind, with startling suddenness, "Next" rings ut from your lips, and the answer is astily seized from another, and in the ame confused haste, the recitation is onducted. Those who lag behind in a Dad where others are travelling are al rays in a cloud of dust. How dusty, lien, must be the brain of those who are !ss quick, and hesitate from timidity? [ow can this cloud of dust become set led? Perhaps their dullness is made iore prominent by such words as: 'Think quick, John." "Haven't you nastered this lesson, Jane?" "I can't ave any hesitation, now think." If the nswer was half formed, such words. rould drive it into infinitesimal particles I dust, and nothing is manifested ex ept that clouded, dusty mind. They re human, and cannot be driven like 'dumb beasts." Give them room, light, reedom of thought and soul.-Ella 1. 'owers, in Teachers' Institute and Practi al Teacher. There is no doubt that we often pass mnanswered questions down the class 0o rapidly. Sometimes we find that a hild cannot answer very quickly, al hough he may know the answer very rell. Haste with such a pupil is often njurious as it makes him have little con idence in himself, and soon causes him ,o underrate his own mental capacity. This is true in' some instances, but enerally slowness on the part of the !acher to pass questions is injurious. Yhv? Because it does not stimulate or ncourage rapid thought. It is one of ldren to be quick in their answers, to them know that promptness is al ys commended. We do not hesitate aying that of the two evils, the one he greater that gives the pupil too ch time for the answer. It encour : slowness and unconcern on the t o f the pupil. ar - oo- at )n last Thursday evening the closing reises of Newberry Male Academy re held at the Opera House. Prof. nes Kinard, the principal of the m oo], had an excellent programme pared, which consisted of speeches, in itations and dialogues. The boys, B bough young, carried through their ~erent parts well. They showed that tir y had. been well trained for the oc ion. The principal announced that school will re-open on the first Mon rin September, 1887. There is no ibt that the Academy has one at its A who has the qualifications to be ie one of the first teachers in the .nty. ot long since several young men re talking of the wonderful rate we travelling, caused by the earth's ro on on its axis, and how strange it is t we do not notice it. One asked the stion: "Do you suppose that anyone r felt the earth moving?" Another wered, "Yes, a good many of us felt ni the 31st of last August." 'he closing exercises of the Female of temy- and, the Prosperity High ool will take place this week. We no sorry that they are at the same time, Al ye would like to attend both'.) he College commencement will be on next Sunday and close on Wed day evening with a reception at the lege. We expect that there will be - e crowds at all the above exercisesM people of the county should take t interest in theec exercises, should w by their presence that they are of ply interested in the education of the ng men. e fully expected to be at Prosperity ast Saturday, but were unable to be -c. Any teacher that does not at 1 every meeting of the associationan something each time lie is not cot ent. to _____ ____- D Leading MIerchant's Testimony. 3 r. D. J. Hlyneman is the leading :er of Corinth, Miss, He stands as socially and financially as he does mani of strictest integrity. He tells his little daughter wvas cured of *. 3 ma. Any one who wishes to hear Sof the case, can do so by .address the gentleman a polite request for W letails of the case. Here is a letter iMr. Hyneman on the subject:DG ' little daughter had eczema some ngo. On recommendation of a7 ician, I gave her S. S. S. At once dTfeet of the medicine made her break worse than she was at first, thus Ant ing out the disease through the skin. is now about well, only a spot here A there oc .ionally showing. 'egard S. .. S. as very effective in ma, and recommend it unhesita y to my neizhbors as a splendid Agi d purifier. Yours truly. D. J. 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Being skeptical on the subject, [ wrote to him on the -,ubject and re eived a most encouraging answer to the ffect that he had been cured long mnough to be thoroughly satisfied that ao return of the disease would en-in. I then sent to the drug store of T. E. smith & Bro., and purchased B. B. B., mud to my utter astonishment and satis Eaction, the use of ten bottles has re tored my general health, stopped the roaring sensation, entirely healed and :nred the nasal catarrh and I am proud to recommend a blood remedy with such powerful curative properties. I shall continue its use a little longer and feel confident that I will be entirely cured'of one of the most obsti nate cases of nasal catarrh in the coun try. The business men of our town know of my case. - N. C. EDWARDS. Lampassas Springs, Texas, May 1, 1886. Blood of a Texan. For siXyears I have been aflieted with blood aison, which continued to in erea while physicians were attempt ing .care me. . One bottle of B. B. 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Special attention given to the wants td comforts of commercial travellers id the transient trade. SPECIAL RATES FOR COMM1NE T. Visitors who may attend the com encement exercises of Newbe-ry Col e are invited to make the NEWBERRY 0TEL headquarters during their stay our city, and make free use of the rading Room and the daily papers 2nd ~tionery to be found there. We oil'erI e lollowing special rates during that ne only. Table Board and Room..$1.50 a day. Two occupying one room 1.25 a day. Table Board..........1.00 a day. Single Meals........... 50 cents. Patronage Solicited. June 1st, 1887. STOP! READ!! THIII! AND ACT, FOR THE IS NOW IN FULL BLAST, ING B8EN EXODEID THROUGHOUT. E BREAD AND CAKES 6' every description, fresh every day. te PUREST CANDY.ever offered to a citizens of Newberry-madle from T thing but the highest grades Sugar. r l flavors. .c 1am Sandwiches 5 cents. I Ice Cream 10 cents. 0 Wedding Cakes a specialty. 4-21 - W. H. PATTON. ILUNERY AND FANCY GOOJS.j WVe are now receiving a beautiful lot new Spring and Summer Millinery,J ite Goods, Dre Goods, Pag Goods, Ribons, a lae, Pre Trimmings, Ladies' Trimmeg ti and Untrimmed Hats, hosiery, Gloves, CorSetS, ti I other choice lots of fashionable ar es to please the best trade of our vi nty. We respectfully invite 4 ladies HI all before making their pm . ases. it MRs. S. A. RISER & CO. t yng of all kinds done at short notice. ly, si cwspnpe.- supporin tP ?rnelples of Published in the City of New York. ILLAM DORSHEIMER, EDITOR. y, Weekly, and Sunday Editions. - HE WEEKLY STAR, Eight-page Newspaper, Issued every Wednesday. lean, pure, bright and interesting FAMILY_PAPER. ontains the latest news, down to the hour of going -icultural, Market, rash ion, Household Financil and OornmercIal, Itical, Poetical, Humorous and Editorial rtents, all under the direction of traine4 l talists of the highest ability. 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COPPOCK, 9-22-ef 1Mollohon Row "SHORT QUOTATIONS." BY GO. C. HODGES, A. M. Read what is said of it "I shall gladly recommend its intro- - duction everywhere." HoN. A. COWARD, Ex. Supt. Education. "It will give me pleasure to recom mend its use by teachers." HoN. HUGH S. THoMPSON, Ex. Supt. Education and Ex. Gov. -When school opens I shall make pious use of the volume." REV. S. LANDlEE, D. D.' Pres. Williamston Female Col "It should be in the hands of all ers." PROF. R. 3IEANS DAV S. C. C "The moral tone which a the work is es acially V REV. W. M. GEIER, D. D., Pres. Erskine College. "Short Quotations" will be found of nestimable value to teachers, ministers, awyers and others. Persons wantin ~elections forI AUTOGRAPH ALBUMS viii find this the book for which they iave been looking. It will be sent post )aid on receipt of 15 cents. Get a copy f it, examine it and introduce it' into our school. Special terms to schools nd dealers. Address W. L. BE LL, Publisher. 9-22-1a. Columbia, S. 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